Spottlight on Public Works

Spottlight on Public Works

Each year in May we join in celebrating Public Works Week. We celebrate the projects that serve communities and make them a better place, and we celebrate the people that make those projects happen. It is public works teams that believe in the future of their communities and the value of the work ahead. That know that it is not just work ahead, but great work ahead. It is work that improves our infrastructure, provides for our neighbors, and offers longstanding safety for our communities.

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Spottlight on Education

Spottlight on Education

This month, schools across the country participated in American Education Week.

The week promotes collaboration between parents and educators. This tradition began in 1921 when members of the American Legion, the U.S. Office of Education, and the National Education Association joined efforts to improve literacy and physical education across the country. This month we celebrate the educators and administrators that are inspiring the next generation of engineers, artists, innovators, and creators.

From helping students to understand how their school is heated and cooled to developing educational materials for outreach activities, to reaching out to the community to facilitate success we are engaged in providing educational opportunities.

We’re here to help. We understand what institutions of learning need, and we deliver cost-effective, sustainable services. The specifics vary, but one course is always part of the program: ensuring a safe and healthy environment for students and staff to learn, live, and work.

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Kent Morey, PE, CBLP Achieves Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional Status

Kent Morey, PE, CBLP Achieves Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional Status

Spotts, Stevens and McCoy is pleased to announce that Kent Morey, PE has earned the Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional (CBLP) designation. The achievement of the CBLP Level 1 designation demonstrates an advanced level of professionalism and knowledge of sustainable landscaping practices for a healthier Chesapeake Bay.

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SSM Welcomes Senior Engineer, Craig Momose, PE

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Spotts, Stevens and McCoy, a family-owned and managed, regional engineering firm based in Reading PA welcomes Craig Momose, PE to the team as a Senior Engineer in the Municipal Engineering and Planning Department.

Mr. Momose has thirty-six years of professional consulting engineering experience serving both the private and public sector. He is responsible for designs of all types of private and public land development projects and review of subdivision and land development plans for local municipalities. His experience includes stormwater management, site grading and earthwork, erosion and sediment control, floodplain and floodway modeling, FEMA Letter of Map Amendment and Letter of Map Revision applications, DEP Joint Permits, General Permits and NPDES Permit applications. Mr. Momose also served numerous municipalities throughout his career. Tasks include design of storm drainage and road improvement projects, waterway permitting, preparation of annual paving specifications, contract management and construction inspection. Services for planning commissions include review of subdivision and land development project stormwater management plans, preparation of improvements agreement cost estimates and review of escrow release applications. Craig is a 1981 graduate of The Pennsylvania State University with a BS in Mining Engineering.

 

City of Philadelphia Releases Building Energy Performance Regulations

The City of Philadelphia recently implemented regulations pertaining to the Building Energy Performance Policy signed into law by Mayor Kenney in December 2019. The Building Tune-Up policy requires all non-residential buildings 50,000 square feet and larger to either conduct a “tune-up” to bring existing building systems up to a state of good repair, or to get an exemption through a high-performance pathway. The newly released regulations better define the requirements of a tune-up and types of exemptions available to buildings.

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